"Looking Towards The
Avenue" is the name given to three bronze sculptures located on 6th Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) at 53nd and 52rd
Streets in midtown Manhattan.

Long Description:

Figurative sculptures
and prints that are suggestive of, but not copies of, the figure of Venus de
Milo are one of American pop artist Jim Dine's favorite subjects. His works on
this theme are widely displayed around the world. Three of these sculptures were
commissioned by Tishman Speyer Trammell Crow Limited Partnership and installed
in front of 1301 Sixth Avenue. The group is entitled "Looking Towards The
Avenue".

These three bronze sculptures are installed on the corners of
53rd Street and 52nd Street and Sixth Avenue in Manhattan. The three are very
similar in execution but vary in size. The largest is 23' high and stands on the
corner of 53rd Street in the center of a square polished black granite base. Two
smaller versions are displayed together on the corner of 52nd Street. They are
smaller, 14' and 18' tall, and are also stand on black polished granite squares.

Each abstract figurative statue is disrobed above the waist and
headless. The figures are composed of angular surfaces. The upper part is
recognizable as a female torso while the parts below the waist are more
impressionistic since they embedded in the bronze matrix of the work. The
headless figures makes the title of the work - "Looking Towards The Avenue" -
quite ironic.

About Me

My interest in travel and exploration took me to all 50 states, much of Canada, Europe, the Caribbean, as well as some of Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and Mexico. As I got older my outdoor activities shifted from hiking to orienteering to geocaching to waymarking.